News

Harvard College Will Ignore Student Magazine Article Echoing Hitler Unless It Faces Complaints, Deming Says

News

Hoekstra Says Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences Is ‘On Stronger Footing’ After Cost-Cutting

News

Housing Day To Be Held Friday After Spring Recess in Break From Tradition

News

Eversource Proposes 13% Increase in Gas Rates This Winter

News

Student Employees Left Out of Work and In the Dark After Harvard’s Diversity Office Closures

Princeton Receives Papers and Diaries Of James Forrestal

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Princeton recently received the personal papers of James Forrestal, the first Secretary of Defense. The papers, composing documents, manuscripts, and diaries are in Nassau's Firestone Library.

The Forrestal papers were presented to Princeton in two donations. Forrestal's widow and son, Michael V. and Peter O. Forrestal, gave the initial donation. The papers are not available to the public because of their personal matter.

Laurance S. Rockefeller and Clarence Dillon '05, a close friend of Forrestal, donated the rest of the documents which Dillon purchased from the New York Herald Tribune. The papers were the foundation of the "Forrestal Diaries", a series of articles published in the Tribune in 1951.

In 1940 President Roosevelt chose Forrestal as his administrative assistant. Forrestal later became Undersecretary of the Navy, Secretary of the Navy, and Secretary of Defense when that post was authorized under the National Security Act of 1947.

Princeton plans to establish a Forrestal Study where certain photographs, modals and appointment certificates will be displayed.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags